Iwo Jima Falls: America Secures a Critical Base
The US Marine Corps secured Iwo Jima on March 16, 1945, after 36 days of fighting that killed 6,821 Americans and virtually all 21,000 Japanese defenders. Only 216 Japanese soldiers were captured alive. The island's strategic value was as an emergency landing field for B-29 bombers returning damaged from raids over Japan. Before Iwo Jima's capture, crippled bombers had to ditch in the Pacific with little chance of crew survival. After the island was secured, 2,251 B-29 bombers made emergency landings on its runways, saving an estimated 24,000 aircrewmen. Japanese holdouts continued to emerge from the island's tunnel network for weeks after the official securing; the last two Japanese soldiers, unaware the war had ended, surrendered in 1949. Admiral Chester Nimitz's assessment of the battle became its epitaph: 'Among the Americans who served on Iwo Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue.' Twenty-seven Medals of Honor were awarded for the battle, the most for any single engagement in American military history.
March 16, 1945
81 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on March 16
Nebuchadnezzar II seized Jerusalem and deposed King Jehoiachin, installing Zedekiah as a puppet ruler to secure Babylonian control over the Levant. This forced …
Nebuchadnezzar didn't destroy Jerusalem the first time — he just walked in and took what he wanted. After a three-month siege in 597 BC, the young King Jehoiach…
Caligula ascended to the Roman throne following the death of Tiberius, ending a period of paranoid isolation in the imperial court. His initial popularity quick…
Two Hunnic bodyguards walked right up to the emperor during archery practice and killed him with their swords. Optila and Thraustila weren't acting on orders—th…
He'd been governor for just five years when Meng Zhixiang bet everything on a crown. The military commander watched Later Tang collapse into chaos and saw his o…
The Jews of York knew the royal castle was a trap, but the mob outside was worse. 150 men, women, and children barricaded themselves inside Clifford's Tower on …
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.